noseoil wrote:Not to hijack the thread (apologies), but is that a group 24 or group 27 battery in the tongue box Tony?
Also, which electric blanket did you get as I've read that some are pretty much junk, they work once then quit. Would the 20 watt panel bring the battery back if you used the electric blanket at night & had sun during the day in the fall or winter, or would you have to bring out the folding panel to be sure?
I'm going with a 100 watt panel on the roof, fixed mount facing up, & the charging module on the galley bulkhead under the counter near the battery (group 27 agm in a box). It's the Renogy el cheapo kit from Amazon. Actually getting close to being able to mount it soon.
It's a Group 27 and more than we need. When it's on its spiral, I'll downgrade to a Group 24.
This is the blanket we use:
http://www.amazon.com/Trillium-Worldwid ... ic+blanketAs you can see, it's 58" x 42" so is on the small size for a queen sized bed. And I can't find a larger one. (We used to have a 12V mattress pad in our old 4-wide, but we could feel the wires and didn't care for it.) This blanket has a 30/45 minute timer
for preheating under a down comforter. I've been known to turn the timer back on in the morning, prior to getting up when its frosty. So we're not using it to burn all night. If I recall, it draws about 4-5 amps/hour.
We just got back from a two-nighter at 6500' and about 46º north. Ice in the dog bucket in the mornings. The low's must have been in the upper twenties. We didn't use the electric blanket. Had we fired it up, we would have used about ... I dunno, six amps at most using the timer. For two nights I wouldn't have gotten the folding panels out. Either way, by the time we're home, the battery is topped off.
I'm sure that 20 amp panel was doing it's best, but at ... I perhaps six amps per day based on sun/shade/intermittent clouds, I wouldn't rely on it for bringing the battery up if we were aggressively using the blanket for two or three nights with a morning kicker.
We had both door windows cracked a bit above the mattress and the fan vent opened a couple of inches. We were fine snuggled under a thick down comforter with a second thinner comforter "just in case" ––which wasn't needed. Even wile exhibiting a high bare-skin ratio during an after-midnight arc into the pine needles.
Tony